Los Angeles Times

McDermott is wasted in thriller

- — Michael Rechtshaff­en

Coming up short on tension and long on talky exposition, “Josie” emerges as a Southern-fried dramatic thriller that fails to deliver the pulpy goods despite a nicely rooted Dylan McDermott lead performanc­e.

Veteran McDermott (“The Practice”) plays the soft-spoken Hank, a Texas transplant holed up alone at the Pink Motel, who, when not parked in his pickup near the local high school on the lookout for delinquent­s, finds companions­hip in the company of his tortoises, Neville and Francine.

That is until the arrival of Josie (Sophie Turner), a teen Lolita in cut-offs and fishnets who has moved into the unit next to him (there’s a vague explanatio­n offered about her parents joining her later) and systematic­ally proceeds to attract his undivided attention.

He’s Damaged Goods. She’s Trouble with a Tattooed T. What could possibly go wrong?

As directed by Eric England and written by Anthony Ragnone II, the answer to that question is revealed in a signaled, would-be shocker ending diminished by stiff dialogue and a plodding pace that appears to have taken its lead from Hank’s tortoises.

Although McDermott inhabits Hank with the haunted demeanor of a man forever tormented by his past transgress­ions, Turner (Sansa Stark on “Game of Thrones”) battles unsuccessf­ully to inject some dimension into someone who comes across more as a device than a living, breathing character.

“Josie.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 27 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Monica Film Center, Santa Monica.

 ?? Screen Media Films ?? SOPHIE TURNER as the title character, who moves into a motel in the Eric England-directed “Josie.”
Screen Media Films SOPHIE TURNER as the title character, who moves into a motel in the Eric England-directed “Josie.”

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